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Ted Grimsrud teaches theology and peace studies at Eastern Mennonite University in Harrisonburg, VA. His commentary on Revelation, Triumph of the Lamb (Herald Press, 1987) is freely available online on his website (Peace Theology). I converted it to a PB for my own use and then asked him for permission to post it here, which he gave me as far as he felt able to (the book is still available in a reprint edition with Wipf & Stock). The publisher has never asked him to take down the free copy on his website, but if they do he will comply. Likewise here.

A couple of key excerpts from his Introduction give you an idea of where he is coming from theologically/hermeneutically:

"After giving up on Hal Lindsey’s approach to the Bible, I became much less concerned with futuristic predictions. I started being more interested in what Revelation says about how we should live now and how this affects how we should look at our world now. Social concerns such as war and peace and economics have become more central to me, and I have wanted to know how the Bible, including Revelation, relates to these concerns. My view of 'prophecy' changed from seeing it primarily in terms of predictions of the future to seeing it in terms of proclaiming God’s truth for today. I now see prophecy more as forthtelling than foretelling."

...

"Recognizing the need to respect the original setting of Revelation, I ... to a large degree take a preterist approach to interpreting it. And then, on the basis of my understanding of what it meant then, I ... understand its message largely in terms of the idealist approach. In my view, the visions and imagery of Revelation symbolize God’s work in human history, God’s victory over evil in Jesus’ work, and God’s moving history toward its consummation in the ultimate destruction of evil and the establishment of the New Jerusalem."

I by no means want to denigrate Rosie's quality work on this. Instead, I want to thank her for bringing this to our attention and creating the PB of it, and arranging permission for a relatively recent quality piece of work. That said, I wanted the index to show the section talked about instead of just the first verse of the section, so that it would show up in reports better, and so modified her PB. In addition, I added a few links to chapters and verses in Revelation, as well as a couple for the Sybiline Oracles.

I repeat, there is nothing wrong with Rosie's version. But I like a few things different, and so offer it to the community as well.

SDG

Ken McGuire

The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann

Interesting that you had to change the datatype to Pseudepigrapha for 2 Baruch to get that link to work for you. It still works for me with your change (though it opens Baruch in a different resource, Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament), but BibleCAP was the datatype provided to me by Logos when I opened to 2 Baruch in The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha. I happen to have both resources, but what about someone who only had the latter? I don't know whether the datatype you changed it to would work better for that situation and open whichever one the person had, or whether it would only open correctly if they had the former. Certainly the datatype I used wouldn't be any better. I don't know if this is one of those datatypes that can be smart and open the right resource depending on which one you have.

I have the Pseudepigrapha in Charles's English (which was in some base packages) and the Greek. Somehow your link didn't work for me, although it appears that the Charles is tagged with that datatype. I was going to the Pseudepigrapha type anyway for the Sybiline Oracles, and so used it. It is personal... Which type is better? Don't know... Obviously the Charlesworth is a more up to date translation... Does Prioritizing resources change things?

The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann

I didn't know I had the Sibylline Oracles (I had tried looking in my library but didn't know they were among the Pseudepigrapha, so I didn't have much luck locating them), but your link for that works for me too.

Nope. I recognize the value of them, but that is not really my big interest. Got the Greek back when it was on pre-pub, got the Charles when it became part of the Original Languages Library, and viewed that combination as more than good enough for what I would use them for.

Rosie Perera:

I didn't know I had the Sibylline Oracles (I had tried looking in my library but didn't know they were among the Pseudepigrapha, so I didn't have much luck locating them), but your link for that works for me too.

I will tell you a secret - If I don't know if I have a resource, the type for it,or exactly WHERE it is in my library, I look it up in the Logos edition of the Anchor-Yale Bible Dictionary. Often there is a link in the article which will take me there.

SDG

Ken McGuire

The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann

I will tell you a secret - If I don't know if I have a resource, the type for it,or exactly WHERE it is in my library, I look it up in the Logos edition of the Anchor-Yale Bible Dictionary. Often there is a link in the article which will take me there.